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How To Build An Unsuitable Overlander

  • Custom parts that can't be directly replaced with standard ones
  • Alloy radiators and header tanks, or radiators with plastic ends / plastic header tanks
    • Copper/brass can be easily repaired with a heat source and some solder
    • Plastic basically can't be repaired at all
    • Alloy can be filled with putty or TIG welded but repairs are tricky and fragile
  • Alloy wheels
  • Wheel spacers
  • Insanely heavy duty shocks / springs / bushes so you crack your chassis or mounts
  • Huge winch & buumper
    • Loads of added weight + cost
    • There's always another vehicle or another way to recover (a bunch of locals and some planks or rope, or a passing elephant, etc.)
  • Massive overloaded roof rack
  • Heavy complicated storage systems
  • Super custom solutions that are single-purpose and inflexible
    • Built-in water/fuel tanks rather than just some universally portable jerry cans
  • Expensive compliated and over-the-top electrical systems
    • Most things can run from 12v, why carry a 2kW inverter to run a power strip to charge a laptop that can run on a 12v supply.

Added heavy duty suspension, cracked the chassis

Gets its own whole section!

Andrew St Pierre White's 4xOverland channel has a very good breakdown of this topic.

Bonus - Added heavy duty suspension, cracked the axle:

And just finding out that aftermarket fancy shocks & modified mounts are a pain in an overlander:

https://forums.lr4x4.com/topic/79997-who-said-it-has-only-two-legs/?do=findComment&comment=685326

tech/rants/underoverlanding.txt ยท Last modified: 2023/06/20 08:38 by jin
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